We’ve seen leaf footed bugs on veggies lately, especially tomatoes. These pests feed on ornamental and wild plants. They also fly, but are slow to move so they’re easy to grab and kill, if you don’t mind a little stink on the fingers. The Bug Book says healthy biodiversity will prevent leaf foots from becoming a [...]
Closed-Loop Measuring Stick
Almost every day, the BG crew collects excess leaves that could not be mulched and returned to the landscapes they came from. We also haul away invasive plants, winter cuttings from dormant perennials, fallen limbs, tilled up lawn grass to make way for new native beds, weeds, carcasses of dead trees and shrubs, and more [...]
Weeds
The broken record spins on. Weeds are a hot topic this year, so I’ve had hours every day to think about the subject, and what we can do about it. The quick version: Funky Weather Patterns - Two years of record heat and drought. Then an unusually hard winter, including a super hard freeze. Then 6 [...]
Spring – Time to Build Soils
Like an ancient coral reef, my approach to organic gardening matures, richens, and deepens every season. I’m like a sponge in the reef, only with legs and eyes, always trying to get close to smart and thoughtful people who have a slightly different and always more experienced perspective than I, and try to absorb as much knowledge [...]
Compost Tea Season
Ask any organic gardener, farmer, rancher, habitat restorationist, ecologist, agronomist, or organic landscaper – microbes are important. (See Spring 2010 issue of EDIBLE AUSTIN for more.) Microbes take a whole corner of the foundational soil triangle: Microbes – Organic Content (Humus) – Soil Structure. Beyond that, lack of research lends to a variety of opinions [...]
Snow in the Hills
On top of “Big Hill”, near Old Tunnel WMA in Kendall County:
Trees, Veggies, Winter Projects, News, Notes, and “Notes”
Feeling guilt for under-spending during the first round of holiday consumption? Don’t try to compensate by eating more cookies or adding another plastic snowman to the front lawn. Take on a landscaping project! Veggie Gardens Now is an excellent time to start a new veggie garden to get ready for spring planting in February/March. We’ve [...]
Soil Test Saves the Day
Organic landscape maintenance programs usually focus on restoring natural balances in soils. In most of Austin, we can count on a few general assumptions (highly disturbed, alkaline clay soils with minimal organic material) to create a general soil restoration plan. Topdressing the lawn with compost will add organic material, beneficial microbes, and nutrients, and is our favorite clutch shooter [...]
October – Time to Feed the Lawn
With the rains and cooler temps, lawns and landscapes in Central Texas have come out of hibernation with some serious ferocity, and they’re hungry. October is generally a good time to apply organic fertilizers to your lawn and landscape. A quick run down of the options: Organic Granular Fertilizer – Slow-release nutrient boost for plants. [...]
No Love For Weed Fabric
There is no shortage of topics that landscapers and gardeners contradict themselves on; how big the tree hole should be; whether gravel is ever ok to use as mulch; how to design a landscape; the best irrigation strategy, blah blah blah. But hopefully, our observations during a recent project can help harmonize the debate on one [...]
About BioGardener
BioGardener Web Site
Archives
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- September 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- February 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- June 2009
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- February 2008
- October 2007
- August 2007
- March 2007
Categories
BioGardener's Favorite Blogs
Friends of BioGardener
- Angel Valley Farm
- AustinMama.com
- Barton Springs Nursery
- Central Texas Clean Cities
- Eastside Cafe
- EComm
- Golden Fuel Systems
- GoodCommonSense.net
- Green Corn Project
- Hill Country Natives
- Johnson's Backyard Garden
- Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center
- Lollipoop Designs
- Madrone Landscape Architecture
- National BioDiesel Board
- Native American Seed
- Native Texas Nursery
- Renewable Lubricants Inc
- Rhizome Collective
- Sustainable BioDiesel Alliance
- Sustainable Food Center – Austin
- Sustainable Shopper's Ball
- TAMU-Horticulture
- Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association
- Texas Plant and Soil Lab
- Websy Daisy





